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Castle and outbuildings à Saint-Rémy en Côte-d'or

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château

Castle and outbuildings

    Rue du Château
    21500 Saint-Rémy
Private property
Château de Saint-Rémy
Château et ses dépendances
Crédit photo : Sdo216 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1234
Assignment to Fontenay Abbey
1540
Renovation by Jacques de Jaucourt
1543
Date engraved on the turret
1795
Sale as a national good
1971
Registration for historical monuments
début XXe siècle
Restoration of the castle
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of the castle, the doorway, the adjoining communes and the dovecote; gallery; chapel (cad. C 758) : entry by order of 25 October 1971

Key figures

Hugues IV - Medieval donor Cede Saint-Rémy at Fontenay in 1234.
Aalays de Villaines-lès-Prévôtes - Donor in the thirteenth century Leaves his estate to the abbey in 1237.
Jacques de Jaucourt - Last regular abbot of Fontenay Renovate the castle around 1540.
Frère Pierre Serain - Religious of Fontenay Designs the chapel of the castle.

Origin and history

The castle of Saint-Rémy, located in the eponymous village of Côte-d-Or (Burgogne-Franche-Comté), was originally an outbuilding of Fontenay Abbey. Built below the village, on the opposite bank of the Brenne and the Burgundy Canal, it is organized around a rectangular platform surrounded by water ditches. Its history is closely linked to that of the abbey, which gradually acquired seigneurial lands and rights in Saint-Rémy from the 13th century, thanks in particular to donations such as those of Hugues IV in 1234 or Aalays de Villaines-les-Prévotes in 1237.

In the 16th century, Father Jacques de Jaucourt, the last regular abbot of Fontenay, undertook major renovations around 1540. He built the house of the abbots, marking the transition to Renaissance architecture, as evidenced by the engraved dates (1543 and 1611) on the hexagonal turret. The castle, which also includes a chapel added by Brother Pierre Serain, preserves defensive elements such as cannons and a drawbridge later replaced by a dormant bridge. The ditches, fed by a canal connected to Burgundy, reinforce its semi-fortified character.

Sold as a national property in 1795 after the Revolution, the castle was transformed into a farm. Its buildings, partially renovated in the 17th and 18th centuries, include barns, a circular dovecote, and a body of Gothic house with arcades. The restoration undertaken at the beginning of the 20th century preserved its facades, roofs, and notable interior elements, such as painted ceilings and Renaissance fireplaces. Since 1971, parts (galerie, chapel, porterie) have been listed as historical monuments.

The architecture of the castle reflects its successive functions: abbey residence, agricultural estate, and symbol of the seigneurial power of Fontenay. Jacques de Jaucourt's weapons, visible in a room above the chapel, recall his role in transforming the site. The Burgundy Canal, later dug, partially alters its environment by removing a medieval bridge that once linked the castle to the village.

Today, the castle of Saint-Rémy illustrates the monastic and aristocratic heritage of Burgundy, while bearing the traces of its adaptation to post-revolutionary agricultural needs. Its partial inscription to historical monuments underscores the value of its Renaissance elements and its spatial organization, typical of abbatial dependencies transformed into seigneurial residences.

External links